Miami Herald

Hospitals are preparing to vaccinate all South Florida healthcare workers

- BY BEN CONARCK bconarck@miamiheral­d.com

Jackson Health System and Memorial Healthcare System are planning to have enough doses of the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine to inoculate South Florida’s healthcare workers.

Two of South Florida’s largest hospital systems could have tens of thousands of doses of the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine as soon as a week from Friday, with enough in that first shipment to vaccinate virtually all of the region’s healthcare workers — exceeding the state’s initial expectatio­ns.

After weeks of frenetic planning, the state of Florida’s vaccine plans began to come into sharper view after a Wednesday video briefing from Gov. Ron DeSantis. In laying out his timeline, DeSantis said the top priority would be residents of nursing homes and other long-term-care facilities, contradict­ing profession­al guidelines and leading some healthcare workers to question on social media whether they were being placed second in line.

But by Thursday, state officials were telling hospitals set to receive the vaccine in Miami-Dade and Broward to expect enough vaccine doses to inoculate their own employees — and other healthcare workers from area hospitals.

The tentative ballpark figure, subject to change, is around 170,000 doses statewide of the Pfizer vaccine in the first shipment, which will arrive in Florida sometime from Dec. 11-17, according to state officials.

Jared Moskowitz — director of the state’s Division of Emergency Management, which is in charge of distributi­ng the vaccine — said skilled-carefacili­ty residents and health

care workers are both expected to receive doses of the vaccine in the first shipment. So did Fred Piccolo Jr., DeSantis’ spokesman.

“I believe the governor feels that each are equally important and each are equally likely to get the vaccine in the first course,” Piccolo said on Thursday. “He continues to fight every day for Florida’s share of the initial batch of vaccine to be commensura­te with our senior population and our healthcare-workers population.”

Moskowitz said the state is planning for multiple scenarios, but if the latest numbers of expected doses and shipments hold, there will be enough to vaccinate “additional people beyond the original assumption from several weeks ago.”

“Everything is just contingent upon how much vaccine actually shows up on day one,” Moskowitz said on Thursday.

Jackson Health System in Miami-Dade and Memorial Healthcare System in Broward County, which both have the needed ultra-cold storage, would be tasked with distributi­ng the vaccine to healthcare workers. Vaccine doses heading for long-termcare and skilled-nursing facilities would be handled by the private companies

Walgreens and CVS.

The DeSantis administra­tion on Thursday published two emergency rules requiring nursing homes and assisted-living facilities to allow representa­tives from the state health department and the two companies into their facilities to help vaccinate seniors, the News Service of Florida reported.

HOW MANY HEALTHCARE WORKERS WILL WANT A SHOT?

One big wildcard is how many of the eligible healthcare workers will volunteer to get vaccinated.

At Jackson, the MiamiDade public-hospital network receiving the vaccine, doctors and nurses are split between being eager to take the vaccine and somewhat leery, according to Martha Baker, the president of the nurses and doctors union.

“Some say, ‘We’ve been doing this for nine months, so I’ll do it for another month and watch,’ ” Baker said. “Not everyone is jumping on the bandwagon and saying, ‘Give it to me now.’ ”

But Baker said there are just as many people who are itching to get inoculated. Those who work in COVID wards, she said, view the vaccine — given in two doses 21 days apart — as an additional layer of protection.

Venessa Goodnow, chief pharmacy officer at Jackson Health System, said the hospital network is surveying its employees this week to gauge their level of interest. Staff can indicate which part of the hospital they work in and whether they’re interested in being inoculated immediatel­y, at a later date, or not at all. She expected to have the results soon.

While Baker said she has concerns about the logistics of inoculatin­g so many healthcare workers, some of whom might suffer mild side effects, she has been telling her members that taking the vaccine when it’s offered is about more than individual benefit and risk.

“My biggest fear is that people want to wait, and too many people are dying for us to wait and watch,” Baker said. “I think caregivers have got to lead on this.”

Goodnow said the hospital system is encouraged that the vaccine’s side effects, when they do appear, tend to be mild and short-lived. She described the decision to get vaccinated as a personal one but said she believes most in the public-hospital system would view it favorably.

“Our mission is to serve our community, so that opportunit­y to get vaccinated early falls really nicely in line with that,” Goodnow said. “As healthcare workers, we have this chance to show the community it’s important and safe.”

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